This activist documentary chronicles the ongoing struggle of indigenous Nahuatl-speaking communities in Morelos, Mexico, who fight to protect their homes from contamination and commercial development. Francesco Taboada Tabone (Pancho Villa and The Last Zapatistas) follows up on his analyses of past Mexican revolutions with this powerful portrayal of local resistence to aggressive developers who see big profits in the region 60 miles south of Mexico City. For Taboada, the topic of autonomy for indigenous groups is part of the legacy of the revolutionary struggle of Emiliano Zapata starting in 1910. Now, a confederation of 13 towns confronts the building of garbage dumps, tract houses and golf courses in their ancestral and protected lands. They must also fight government and developers who are not above using bribes, threats, lies and brute force to protect their own interests.